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The Department of Pharmacology, Physiology, and Neurobiology encompasses a diverse research portfolio of basic and translational cardiovascular research. The cardiovascular biology investigators of the department utilize genetic animal models, advanced mouse surgery interventions, metabolic biology tools, and computational methods to study the pathophysiology of heart failure, as well as the signaling mechanisms related to heart, vascular, and skeletal muscle function in health and disease. Over the last decades our cardiovascular investigators have made seminal contributions in the areas of heart failure, arrythmias, diabetes, sepsis, ischemia, and aging, including cardiac injury and remodeling. Their research has revealed novel molecular mechanisms, including transcriptional regulation, regulation of electrical and mechanical pathways, calcium trafficking and ion channels properties, metabolic pathways, as well as the effects of the immune and the endocrine systems in cardiac and vascular function that may lead to new therapeutic treatments.
Our research investigates transcriptional regulation mechanisms that link cardiac stress with altered myocardial fatty acid and glucose metabolism.
View Drosatos Laboratory
Our group investigates the molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying stress- and disease-induced cardiovascular remodeling.
View Fan Laboratory
The Gao Lab is focused on uncovering novel molecular mechanisms for the pathogenesis of cardiac diseases, including cardiac hypertrophy, remodeling, and dysfunction.
View Gao Laboratory
Our laboratory conducts basic research on muscle physiology at the molecular and cellular levels.
View Heiny Laboratory
The Kranias laboratory is focusing on the role of Ca2+-handling and Ca2+-signaling in the regulation of myocardial function and survival in health and disease.
View Kranias Laboratory
My lab is currently engaged in research to examine the autonomic cardiovascular effects of traumatic brain injury (TBI).
View Lorenz Laboratory
My research program works to elucidate the signaling mechanisms involved in cardiac pathophysiology, especially in relation to cardioprotection (heart protecting itself against injury due to ischemia) and heart failure.
View Laboratory
We are interested in how normal cardiac physiology is governed by various cardiac ion channels, and how cardiac electrical properties are altered in disease conditions or by environmental chemicals.
View Wang Laboratory
Department of Pharmacology, Physiology, and Neurobiology
College of MedicinePO Box 670576Cincinnati, OH 45267-0576
Ms. Jennifer BedelAssociate To The ChairPhone: 513-558-5636Email: bedelj@ucmail.uc.edu